Originally posted by: IT Professional Ant
I have a long going debate with a few IT friends of mine as well as associates and customers about the benefits and downfalls of overclocking your hardware of your PC..
We all know it voids your warranty on almost all your parts..
We all know it boosts performance of your PC..
I just do not understand why people overclock and have a firm belief with as fast as todays stock parts are currently, that there is no need for a overclock at all..
So your counterstrike loads faster?
So your WOW loads faster?
and the higher frame rate thing is moot point with me.. I go mid to high end videocard for new technology and for beauty in games and 3d apps.. Frame rate is pointless above the point we cant even see it with the naked eye..
The questions I pose is this..
Why do you as an individual overclock your parts?
Do you care about your warranty?
Well, for me the warranty on a CPU is useless. I've been using computers for 17 years, and I've never had a single CPU die on me. I've been overclocking for 7 years, and again, never had a CPU die on me. I always stress test my processors at stock, usually with the stock Intel heatsink/fan, for a few days before I begin my overclocking ventures. If it's going to die, it's more than likely going to be bad right off the bat.
Unfortunately, stock performance, even these days, is not adequate enough, on many parts. If it were, there would be very little difference in a faster clocked stock processor. Check some of the CPU reviews here at AT, or even some of the overclocking reviews here on the latest 45nm Wolfdale Core 2 Duo's. They test a lot more than just gaming, and often the differences between overclocked and not is quite big, depending on your application.
I play my games at "low" resolutions, typically 1280x960. Even with an HD3850, I'm still fairly CPU limited. I used to have an E2140 that was stock clocked at 1.6Ghz, and OC'd to 2.9Ghz. The difference in some of my games was usually well into the double digits, and a few games (Crysis, TF2) I could not hold a minimum 30fps at stock (well, 20fps for Crysis). My overclocked speeds made this possible. Hell, even COD4 was much smoother after the OC.
In addition, I encode videos, which results in often a dramatic decrease in encoding times. My folding speeds also increase quite a bit, which is a benefit if you're into distributed computing. I've currently got an E8400 that I've been overclocking, and I'll be benching that shortly.
Suffice it to say...I've gained quite a bit for very little of my time, and lost nothing.